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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the major currents in American women's history during the Nineteenth Century.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the major currents in American women's history during the Twentieth Century.
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3.00 Credits
Exploration of witch beliefs and witch-hunting in colonial America, incorporating religious, cultural, gendered, psychological, political, legal, social, and economic perspectives.
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3.00 Credits
Explores selective elements of modern American politics, policy studies, media, and public history, predominantly since 1960.
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3.00 Credits
The Second World War: Analysis of its origins, the military and political course of events, and its consequences, such as the cold war.
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3.00 Credits
History of the beach as a particular geographic place and space in human history in comparative world context. Themes and issues include tourism, socio-economic factors in beach access, beach-related industries, immigration, cultural contact, exploration, beach life, surfing, ethnicity, segregation, and politics of real estate.
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3.00 Credits
Human relations with the sea from prehistoric times t0 the present and across the globe. It will look at the spread of peoples, ideas, religions, and goods across the seas, and the role of networks, empires and navies in this history.
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3.00 Credits
Content varies by semester and is indicated parenthetically following course title in class schedules.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the experiences of foreign and domestic travelers in Latin America. Seminar members will look carefully at the shared assumptions of travelers and compare their modes of social investigation. To this end, the course teaches students how to create their own research paper based on the diverse historical materials housed in the Cuban Heritage Collection.
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3.00 Credits
The establishment of the Dutch settlements and the apartheid system, African responses to European domination, and the collapse of apartheid and the emergence of a multi-racial South Africa.
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